Birmingham Excelsior F.C.
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox football club
| clubname = Birmingham Excelsior
| fullname = Birmingham Excelsior Football Club
|nickname = the Excels{{cite journal |title=Midland notes |journal=Athletic News |date=6 January 1885 |page=7}}
| founded = 1874
| dissolved = c.1889
| ground = Fentham Road
|capacity =
| pattern_la1 = _yellow_stripes
| pattern_b1 = _yellow_stripes
| pattern_ra1 = _yellow_stripes
| pattern_sh1 =
| pattern_so1 =
| leftarm1 = 800000
| body1 = 800000
| rightarm1 = 800000
| shorts1 = ffffff
| socks1 = 660000
}}
Birmingham Excelsior Football Club was an English football club with a claimed foundation date of 1874.Charles Alcock Football Annuals 1885-7
History
The club emerged from an athletics club founded in 1869, which in turn was related to the Excelsior Works in Birmingham town centre. The club continued to hold athletics meetings, and, in 1877, after a dispute over a three-mile run, a number of club members - including Excelsior player/secretary Thomas Pank, who would soon join Aston Villa - founded the Birchfield Harriers athletic club.
Excelsior were early members of the Birmingham Football Association and entered the Birmingham Senior Cup, the leading competition for Midlands clubs, for the first time in 1879–80, losing 8–1 to Aston Villa in the second round.
The club's best player was George Tait, who received an England cap while registered with the club,{{cite journal |title=International Association Match, England v Wales |journal=Blackburn Standard |date=5 March 1881 |page=3}} and the Birmingham Daily Post reckoned the team as being "nearly the best in Birmingham". However, Tait died of typhoid in November 1882, and the club never recovered from his loss. Indeed, the club nearly wound up before the start of the 1883–84 season, but fresh organisation and the recruitment of new playing members, bolstered by a first entry into the FA Cup, kept the club going.{{cite journal |title=Small Heath Alliance 1-1 Birmingham Excelsior |journal=Athletic News |date=24 October 1883 |page=7}} The club entered the competition every year until qualifying rounds were introduced in 1888–89.
The club's only significant trophy success came in the Wednesbury Charity Cup in 1884–85, Excelsior beating Stafford Rangers 6–1 in the semi-final{{cite journal |title=Wednesbury Charity Cup |journal=Birmingham Mail |date=13 April 1885 |page=7}} and upsetting Mitchells St George's 5–0 in the final, four of the goals coming in the first half; Jack Devey was one of the Excelsior scorers.{{cite journal |title=Wednesbury Charity Cup |journal=Birmingham Daily Post |date=18 May 1885 |page=8}}
File:Match report for the 1884-85 Wednesbury Charity Cup Final between Excelsior and St George's.jpg
1885–86 saw the club's best performance in the Birmingham Senior Cup, reaching the fourth round (the last six) and only losing to Wolverhampton Wanderers in a second replay,{{cite journal |title=Birmingham Cup Tie |journal=Lichfield Mercury |date=19 February 1886 |page=7}} having come from 3–0 down in the original tie.{{cite journal |title=Birmingham Cup Ties |journal=Lichfield Mercury |date=22 January 1886 |page=7}} Two weeks later Excelsior easily beat Aston Villa 3–0 away from home.{{cite journal |title=Aston Villa v Excelsior |journal=Birmingham Daily Post |date=1 March 1886 |page=7}}
However, the Football Association had recently allowed professionalism. Over the previous seasons, Aston Villa in particular had found ways around the FA's stance, and, as was common with other clubs based in Aston and thereabouts, Excelsior found it difficult to retain its players, or attract attendances - the home FA Cup tie with Derby Midland in 1885–86 attracted just 400 spectators,{{cite journal |title=Excelsior 0-2 Derby Midland |journal=Birmingham Daily Post |date=2 November 1885 |page=7}} compared with over 6,000 at Walsall Town for its tie with Aston Villa at the same stage.{{cite journal |title=Walsall v Aston Villa |journal=Walsall Observer |date=24 October 1885 |page=7}} When professionalism was legalised, Villa had had a head start that was impossible for Excelsior to close, and other players were recruited by the business-backed West Bromwich Albion and Mitchell St George's.
The club's last entry into the FA Cup was in 1887–88. In the first round, the club beat Warwick County 4–1 at Edgbaston Cricket Ground, but had to replay the tie after a protest about the registration of one of the club's players;Which turned out to be due to a clerical error by the FA - Birmingham Mail, 26 October 1887 in the replay, the club won by a bigger margin (5–0).{{cite journal |title=Warwick County 0-5 Excelsior |journal=Birmingham Daily Post |date=24 October 1887 |page=7}} The club got a bye in the second round, meaning the club reached the third round for the only time in its history, where it lost to Great Bridge Unity in front of a "small" attendance.{{cite journal |title=Excelsior 1-2 Great Bridge Unity |journal=Birmingham Daily Post |date=28 November 1887 |page=6}} However the club lost many of its players by the end of the season - most crucially William Siddons moving to St George's,{{cite book|last=Joyce|first=Michael|title=Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939|year=2004|publisher=SoccerData|isbn=1-899468-67-6}} and in April 1888 it resorted to advertising for players in "all positions".{{cite journal |title=Birmingham Excelsior Football Club |journal=Birmingham Evening Mail |date=16 April 1888 |page=1}}
The club's last entry into the Birmingham Senior Cup in 1888–89 (when it was described as a "ghost" of a club){{cite journal |title=Football Notes |journal=The Birmingham Daily Mail |date=17 October 1888 |page=4}} saw it lose 7–0 at Oldbury Town in a qualifying round; the club also lost 6–0 in the first round of the Junior Cup to Coleshill.{{cite journal |title=Birmingham Cup ties |journal=Lichfield Mercury |date=9 November 1888 |page=6}} The club was even having difficulty in putting a side together (a 7–0 defeat at Leek F.C. in November saw the club only field ten men{{cite journal |title=Leek v Excelsior |journal=Birmingham Daily Post |date=26 November 1888 |page=7}}).
The last report for a club match was a 15–1 defeat in a friendly at Darwen in December 1888,{{cite journal |title=Results |journal=Liverpool Mercury |date=31 December 1888 |page=7}} although one final match was scheduled against Loughborough in the following February at Fentham Road;{{cite journal |title=Saturday's matches |journal=Leicester Mercury |date=1 February 1889 |page=3}} it does not appear to have taken place.
Colours
Excelsior played in yellow and maroon, originally in hoops{{cite news|title=Eminent Victorians (The Midlands)|work=historicalkits.co.uk|accessdate=20 February 2021|first=Dave|last=Moor|publisher=Historical Football Kits|url=http://historicalkits.co.uk/Eminent%20Victorians/Midlands.html}} but by the mid-1880s in stripes, with white shorts.{{cite book |last1=Bradbury |first1=Mike |title=Birth of the Saddlers |date=2013 |publisher=John Griffiths Publishing}}
Grounds
Originally the club played at the Aston Lower Grounds and moved to the former St George's ground in Fentham Road in Aston in 1885.{{cite book |last1=Carr |first1=Steve |title=History of the Birmingham Senior Cup |date=2000 |publisher=Grorty Dick}} After Excelsior's winding-up, the ground was used as a football and rugby ground until 1895,{{cite journal |title=Football |journal=Birmingham Daily Gazette |date=8 December 1895 |page=3}} and by 1900 was under housing.
Notable players
- George Tait, England international
- Harry Devey and his nephew Jack, future League players for Aston Villa
- Alf Farman, future Aston Villa and Newton Heath player
- Wilbert Harrison, leading scorer for Birmingham St George's in the Football Alliance
Honours
Wednesbury Charity Cup
References
{{Reflist}}
Category:Association football clubs established in 1874
Category:Defunct football clubs in England
Category:1874 establishments in England
Category:Sport in Birmingham, West Midlands
Category:Defunct football clubs in the West Midlands (county)
Category:Football clubs in Birmingham, West Midlands